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Geology of Llano Estacado, 2001
We document a rich Upper Triassic bonebed in Borden County, Texas in either the uppermost Tecovas Formation or, more likely, the Trujillo Formation of the Chinle Group, that represents one of the highest stratigraphic occurrences of the aberrant archosauromorph reptile Trilophosaurus.
Heckert, Andrew B. +3 more
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We document a rich Upper Triassic bonebed in Borden County, Texas in either the uppermost Tecovas Formation or, more likely, the Trujillo Formation of the Chinle Group, that represents one of the highest stratigraphic occurrences of the aberrant archosauromorph reptile Trilophosaurus.
Heckert, Andrew B. +3 more
openaire +1 more source
Paläontologische Zeitschrift, 1993
We report here on gut contents in partial skeletons of the small pareiasaurParasaurus geinitzi and the archosauromorph reptileProtorosaurus speneri from the Kupferschiefer (Zechstein 1; Upper Permian) of the Richelsdorf Mountains (Hesse). They represent two of the stratigraphically oldest known records of gut contents in terrestrial tetrapods.
Wolfgang Munk Karlsruhe +1 more
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We report here on gut contents in partial skeletons of the small pareiasaurParasaurus geinitzi and the archosauromorph reptileProtorosaurus speneri from the Kupferschiefer (Zechstein 1; Upper Permian) of the Richelsdorf Mountains (Hesse). They represent two of the stratigraphically oldest known records of gut contents in terrestrial tetrapods.
Wolfgang Munk Karlsruhe +1 more
openaire +1 more source
The Anatomical Record
AbstractTeyujagua paradoxa is a remarkable early archosauromorph from the Lower Triassic Sanga do Cabral Formation, Brazil. The species was originally described from an almost complete skull and a few associated cervical vertebrae, and no further postcranial elements were known at that time.
Tiane M. De‐Oliveira +3 more
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AbstractTeyujagua paradoxa is a remarkable early archosauromorph from the Lower Triassic Sanga do Cabral Formation, Brazil. The species was originally described from an almost complete skull and a few associated cervical vertebrae, and no further postcranial elements were known at that time.
Tiane M. De‐Oliveira +3 more
openaire +2 more sources
Author response for "Locomotion and the early Mesozoic success of Archosauromorpha"
2023null Shipley, Amy E +4 more
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Decision letter for "Locomotion and the early Mesozoic success of Archosauromorpha"
2023openaire +2 more sources

